Australian  photographer Martin Pugh captured this image of the Whirlpool Galaxy  which combines fine detail in the spiral arms with the faint tails of  light that show its small companion galaxy being gradually torn apart by  the gravity of its giant neighbour. A closer look shows even more  distant galaxies visible in the background.
Australian  photographer Paul Haese captured a spectacular view of Venus passing in  front of the sun in the rare ‘transit’ in June this year. This is a  spectacular view of the active Sun, streaked and blotched with  filaments, sunspots and prominences. Venus, a world almost exactly the  same size as the Earth, seems dwarfed by the scale and power of our  local star.
Photographer  Tunç Tezel captured the earthly lights of towns and villages, spread  out beneath the heavenly glow of one arm of our own galaxy, the Milky  Way. Making the most of an August night, the photographer got this shot  after trekking out to the Uludag National Park near his hometown of  Bursa, Turkey.
American  photographer Robert Franke used narrowband filters to increase the  detail in this image of the ‘Witch’s Broom’ nebula – the remnants of an  ancient explosion in deep space. Part of the Veil Nebula, the ‘Witch’s  Broom’ is the glowing debris from a supernova explosion – the violent  death of a massive star. Although the supernova occurred several  thousand years ago, the gaseous debris is still expanding outwards,  producing this vast cloud-like structure.
American  photographer Michael A Rosinski’s image blends artificial light, swarms  of fireflies, and the long arcs of star trails overhead, captured using  long exposures.
Crowds  around the world gathered to watch the rare moment when Venus passed in  front of our sun earlier this year. Photographer Chris Warren captured  this image in Blackheath, London, in one shot using a ‘Hydrogen-Alpha’  filter, when the clouds briefly parted to allow a glimpse of the event.
British  astrophotographer Damian Peach captured this series of stills of the  surface of Mars – offering a complete picture of the hostile world  currently being explored by Nasa’s Curiosity rover. It shows the  gleaming north polar cap of frozen water and carbon dioxide, the red  equatorial deserts and the darker southern highlands. The photographer  has captured an amazing level of detail, including wispy clouds in the  thin Martian atmosphere.
sumber : http://galeriilmiah.wordpress.com/2012/10/17/hasil-karya-fotografer-dunia-tahun-ini-astronomi/
 
 
 
 
 

 
No comments:
Post a Comment